Well Ralph, if I was being serious - and that's a big 'if' as you should know well from my usual posts :whistle: - this is a perfectly valid 'statistic', in fact anecdotal evidence is a very useful check to conventional statistical analysis of independent variables, i.e. even if the 'odds' are, say for outcome 'x' to be 1,000,000,000,000,000 to 1 greater than outcome 'y' that doesn't mean to say that 'y' won't happen the very first time the test is made, nor that last, nor anywhere in between, or, in fact, in every single one of the 1,000,000,000,000,000 times you might be fool enough to repeat the test - or in Plan English, "If it can happen it will happen."-Ralph- wrote: Whoopie doo! Once upon a time, in a land far far away, there was a fire.
So all we can find is a YouTube video? Where are those statistics I asked for? How many times a year this happens in the UK would be a good start. My guess is on average, zero times!
Best not ride your motorcycle if you can't cope with those odds chaps, it FAR too dangerous. About 500 people a year die in the UK doing that.
Sent from my SM-G935F using Tapatalk
That's why when I have spare € coin in my pocket when I pass the ONCE lottery stall with the pretty blind girl in it - that's the one who doesn't step back in horror when I say ¡Hola! - I happily buy a ticket that has an approximate chance of winning of zilch times 'x' ('x' being the biggest number you can say without stopping for breath times 2). Why? Because the odds of winning when you haven't bought a ticket are zero, whereas any probability above zero is in fact infinity more than zero - which sound more appealing doesn't it.
Back in the real world - where I manage to struggle by despite having studied stats as part of my various university degrees and diplomas - if we all made all of our decisions based on statistics the world would grind to a halt pretty darned quickly. I guess more than a few on this here forum earn their living assessing the probability of undesirable outcomes, say a bridge falling down or an airplane engine falling off, and weigh these up against the costs, or even possibility, of preventing these from actually happening ... and as to anecdotal evidence, look though the video all the way and see how much more harm came about by the chain reaction following the 'incident' - then work out the probabilities of all of that happening, then go buy an accumulator from William Hill, pop outside and give it to a beggar! (thumbs)
Regs
Simon
PS - I ride an X-Country with an X-tank - I would certainly get a slipped disk if I tried to fill up from the saddle
